Track Homework for 6-7 Classes Online | See All Assignments in One Place
The Multiple-Class Homework Problem
In high school, you're not tracking homework for one class—you're tracking it for six or seven completely separate classes, each with its own teacher, its own assignment style, and its own due dates. That complexity is where organization breaks down for most students.
Think about your typical week. You have math homework every Monday and Wednesday. English has reading due every other day, plus weekly essays. History has quiz dates you need to remember. Science has lab reports that take multiple days. Spanish has vocabulary practice. Your elective has its own random assignments. And sometimes everything is due on the same day.
The challenge isn't just remembering that you have homework—it's remembering what homework you have for which class, when each piece is due, and making sure nothing slips through the cracks when you're juggling seven different sets of deadlines.
Why Traditional Methods Fail with Multiple Classes
Physical planners with one page per day: You can write everything down, but when you're trying to see all your biology assignments for the week, you have to flip through multiple pages. It's hard to get a complete picture of one class's workload.
One notebook for all classes: Eventually everything blends together. You're scrolling through pages trying to find that English assignment from three days ago while math homework from last week is mixed in.
Relying on memory: Works until it doesn't. You remember your math and English homework because those are first period and second period, but by the time you're thinking about homework at 8 PM, you've completely forgotten about that Spanish worksheet.
Checking each class on Google Classroom separately: This actually works, but it's slow. You have to click into seven different classes, wait for each page to load, check what's listed, and mentally combine all that information. By the time you're done, you've forgotten what was due in the first class you checked.
Sticky notes for each class: Soon you have seven sticky notes scattered across your desk, backpack, and locker. One gets lost, and you're missing that entire class's assignments.
The core problem is that most organization methods either show you everything mixed together (hard to separate by class) or separate by class but make it hard to see everything at once.
How to Actually Organize Homework for Multiple Classes
What you need is a system that lets you both see all your homework across all classes AND filter by specific classes when you want to focus on one. It needs to be fast enough that you'll actually use it seven different times per day (once per class) and simple enough that adding homework doesn't feel like a chore.
One List for Everything, Organized by Class
Imagine a single list that shows every assignment across all your classes, but clearly labels which class each one is for. You can scan it and immediately see:
- Math homework due tomorrow
- English reading due Wednesday
- History quiz Friday
- Science lab report due next Monday
- Spanish vocabulary practice due Thursday
- Art project due next week
Everything is visible, but it's not a chaotic mess because each assignment shows which class it belongs to. You're not guessing whether that worksheet is for math or science.
Quick Filtering When You Need It
Sometimes you want to see everything. Other times you want to focus on one class. Maybe you're in your English classroom between periods and you want to remember what's been assigned recently for this class specifically. You should be able to filter to just English assignments in one click.
Or maybe you're planning your evening and you want to see what's due tomorrow across all classes. One filter shows just tomorrow's work from all seven classes.
The power is in being able to switch between these views instantly—total overview or specific class focus—without maintaining separate lists or notebooks for each class.
How This Multi-Class Homework Tracker Works
This tracker is built specifically for students taking 6-7 classes who need to keep all that homework straight without overthinking their organization system.
Adding Assignments for Each Class
You're in math class. Teacher assigns homework. You open the tracker, type "Math" (or select it if you've used it before), type what the assignment is, pick the due date. Done. 10 seconds.
Next period is English. Same process. "English," type the reading assignment, set the date. Another 10 seconds.
By the end of the school day, you've captured homework from all your classes in maybe 2 minutes of total time. Everything is in one place, clearly labeled by class, and you didn't have to think about organization systems or which notebook to write in.
Checking What's Due
Before you start homework at night, you open the tracker. You see:
Due Tomorrow:
- Math: Problem set page 47 #1-30
- English: Read chapter 5
- History: Study vocab for quiz
Due This Week:
- Science: Lab report (Friday)
- Spanish: Worksheet packet (Wednesday)
- English: Essay draft (Thursday)
Now you know exactly what needs to get done tonight (math, English reading, history studying) and what you need to plan time for later this week.
Focusing on One Class
Maybe you're falling behind in science and you want to see all your science assignments for the month. Filter to just science, and you see every science assignment from the past few weeks plus everything coming up. Now you can identify what you've missed and what's still coming.
Or your English teacher asks if you've done the reading from last week. Filter to English, scroll back a few days, and you can immediately confirm whether you marked it as done.
Why Multiple Classes Make This Tracker Essential
The more classes you have, the more valuable this kind of tracker becomes. If you only had two classes, you could probably remember everything. But with six or seven classes, each assigning homework at different frequencies, the cognitive load is too high.
Uneven Assignment Patterns
Math might give homework every single day. English might give big assignments once a week. History alternates between reading and writing assignments. Science has occasional lab reports mixed with regular homework. Spanish has daily practice but also unit tests to study for.
You can't just develop a routine like "always do math homework after school" because the pattern is different for every class. You need to see what's actually due, not guess based on patterns.
Different Due Date Styles
Some teachers always make things due the next day. Others give you a week. Some assign things on Monday due Friday. Others assign things on Friday due Monday. Some give deadlines like "sometime next week."
When every class has different timing expectations, you can't rely on rules like "homework is due tomorrow." You need to track the actual due date for each assignment in each class.
Preventing the Forgotten Class
Everyone has that one class where they keep forgetting homework. Maybe it's sixth period, so by the time you're thinking about homework, you've mentally checked out. Or it's an elective you don't think of as a "real" class. Or it's before lunch and you forget it by the afternoon.
When you track all classes in one place, that forgotten class is on the same list as all your other classes. You can't overlook it because it's right there alongside math and English.
Real Multi-Class Scenarios
Scenario 1: Heavy homework days
You look at Wednesday and see you have homework due in five different classes. That's going to be a long night, so you start some of it on Tuesday to spread out the workload. Without seeing all Wednesday's work at once, you wouldn't have known to plan ahead.
Scenario 2: Test week
You have three tests next week: math on Tuesday, history on Wednesday, science on Friday. You can see all three at once and plan study time that doesn't conflict with ongoing homework.
Scenario 3: Long-term project
You have an English research paper due in 3 weeks. While focusing on daily homework, it's easy to forget about the paper until it's too late. But because it's on your homework list, you see it every time you check what's due. That constant reminder makes sure you start working on it with enough time.
Scenario 4: Catching up after being absent
You were sick for two days. Instead of asking seven different teachers what you missed or checking seven Google Classroom pages, you look at your tracker and see exactly what was due while you were gone across all classes.
What Makes This Better Than Other Options
Better than Google Classroom: Shows all classes at once instead of requiring seven separate page loads.
Better than a planner: Can filter by class or date, and you'll never lose it.
Better than Notion: Fast and simple instead of requiring database setup.
Better than separate class notebooks: Everything is searchable and consolidated.
Better than sticky notes: Can't lose them, can access from any device.
The magic is in the combination: class-level organization without maintaining separate systems, and whole-schedule visibility without chaotic mixing.
For AP and Honors Students
If you're taking multiple AP or Honors classes, this becomes even more critical. Those classes assign more work, with longer projects and more complex deadlines. Trying to track AP US History essays, AP Calc problem sets, AP English reading, and Honors Chemistry labs in your head is setting yourself up to forget something important.
The students who succeed in multiple rigorous classes aren't the ones who remember everything—they're the ones who write everything down in a system they actually use. This is that system, without the friction that makes you stop using it after a week.
High school throws a lot of homework at you from a lot of different directions. You can't control how much work teachers assign or when they make it due. But you can control whether you remember all of it or forget half of it. Track everything in one place, and you'll never miss an assignment because it was for the wrong class or lost in the shuffle.
Key Features
- See all 6-7 classes worth of homework in one clean list without switching apps
- Filter by specific class when you need to focus, or view everything at once
- Track assignments, tests, and projects across all classes with clear due dates
- Never forget homework from that one class because it's always on the same list
